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The Seaforth News, 1954-05-13, Page 3Lawn {;,are when it's hot When the real summer heat coznrnencee, one should make a few changes in the regular lawn care. Grass is a cool and motet loving plant and in most parts of Canada it is not likely to get that sort of weather In July and August, it won't make much growth when the thermometer goes much above 75. In conse- queuee one should cut less often in' hot weather and also set the mower higher. And even if we remove the clippings earlier in the spring it is a good plan to let them lie where they fall in the summer. They will make a mulch which with the longer grass will protect the roots from the burning sun. Early summer when the nights get fairly warm is the best time to apply the chemical weed kill- ers. Used with reasonable care it is amazing how these will wipe out dandelion, plantain and most broad leaved weeds. One tihouid cover the whole lawn but one must be •careful to miss any flowers or shrubbery because these sprays will seriously dam- age if not kill them. For a real job one should always repeat the spraying in about three weeks to a month's time. This second application will catch those weeds which have sprouted from seed since the first treat- ment, It is best to keep ane sprayer for this weed killing business only, otherwise one must be most careful to wash machine and nozzle thoroughly before using for any other pur- pose. They need support Sweet peas and the taller regular garden sorts and also other climbers will need support. Some people use chicken wire .4rr old tennis nets or strings, but a better material is brush if a supply can be obtained. This is pushed firmly in the ground long the rows and before the . e, pqlants are more than a few inches high. Depending upon 'the locality brush from three to Peet high is suitable and the 'bushier the better. Most of the taller annual flow. errs will also benefit from some support especially where winds or heavy rains are liable to do some damage. Often stakes a little shorter than the plant is high and driven in close will be euffieient. The plants are tied to these loosely with soft twine, raffia or any of the special twist- ing materials sold by seed stores. With low bushy plants like peonies, sometimes a hoop of wire or wood is placed about them and a foot or so above the ground. In England around del- phiniums they stick bits of brush in the ground. Gradually the plant grows about this and hiding it but being firmly sup- ported just the sante. Mast people nowadays stake their to- matoes. Usually a six to seven foot stake is driven firmly in the ground when the tomato plant is set out. About every foot of growth the stem is tied loosely but securely. All side shoots are nipped off and to- warcls the end of the summer to hasten maturity of fruit the maim stem is also nipped. Proper Watering Wateringthegarden garden will prob- Ab1y be necessary sometimes in July and August. Here a lot of mistakes are made by those un- familiar. with the likes and dis- likes of plants including lawn grass. One thorough soaking, teat will take the moisture down a couple of inches is worth a dozen sprinklings and it will last for some time. Sprinkling offons Ezerly to assure Cons A sheer chambray in xieari gray is used for this sleeveless dress. Front and collar are tucked; skirt is wide through tow of sort gathers. E'! EDYN.A '40Li1S p''UT"i'©N' has beeomo a year- around fabric. This spring's cotton crop in- cludes cottons that are suitable now, if you live in a warm cli- mate, or reedy to go into a "nest egg" for summer, it you live in a part of the country where spring means suits and toppers. Having such a neat egg against hot summer weather saves both on your budget and your temper. Y1 you shop for cottons now, youtll have them ready against the first simmer- ing day. This day usually arrives when your closet is empty of anything even remotely wearable. Last summer's cottons have somehow managed to collapse during the winter and just don't look right. Anyone who's ever been forced to wear a heavy suit or dress on a hot day (and apologize for it) knows that buying ahead is just as much Insurance as taking out a policy. •You needn't pay a lot for a whole wardrobe of smart cot- tons. Clever cottons at budget Sheath -top option dress prices are being shown across wide skirt with rate empress* the country. And they offer QIegi. Scalloped neckline le smart fabrics as well as good trimmed with eord, and belt .is. (lesion velvet. never gets the moisture down more than a fraction of an inch and the roots must come up to • the surface to get it, thus expos- ing themselves more and more to drying and killing by heat and sun, Heavy soakings, how- ever, does not mean turning the nozzles on full blast. The near- er we get to a fine mist the better Half A Million Miles y Taxicab A London taxi has arrived in Capetown, South Africa after having been driven all the way from England. Drivers of the cab, registered number BUC983, are Wally Wright, 25, Derrick Dixon, 25, and George Hadiaris, 26. They drove right across Europe, and went to Capetown by way of Johannesburg and Durban. Their travels so far have cost theta about $1500, and now they need someone to finance theta before they can go to America. The outside of their cab is a mass of seribblings that pro- claim its various achievements, among others that it has done more than 500,000 utiles. So tar, repairs have been tele• tively fele? The replacement of two front spriugs and two tires have been among the most es - pensive items. • Gasoline, so fat•, has cost them nothing. Derrick .Dixon explain.. ed: "A well-known 0i1 company has supplied us with free gaso- line." The interior of the cab is lit- tered with pennants and souve- nirs from the various countries they have visited, but probably the most prized of lheor posses- sions is their mascot "Gonzales," a doll dressed ae a Mexican cowboy. I've tried a lot of way's of brooding chicks, but none com- pares with the concrete slab, says O. E. Funkhouser, Yell Co., Ark. as reported in the Phila- delphia Farm Journal. He has brooded 12,000 chicks (in four broods) on slabs for less than a half -cent per chick. His initial cost for putting in the slab brooders figured out about 10 cents per bird - "about the seine as other brooders," says Jfunkhousel'. Here's how he made the brooders: Ile put in an 8'x10' slab for each 1,000 chicks. First he put down four inches of cinders or washed gz:avel, and covered it with building paper. Then he poured on two inches of In- sulating concrete, and on top of that, two 120 -foot lengths of lead -covered electric soil -heat- ing cable. Then he topped the cable with two more inches of regular concrete, and smoothed it. CROSSWORD ORD PUZZLE 40110:43 4, Eloquent speaker 5, Woody plant 8, Sloths 5, Fa hoe y 3. Partakes 1. Spanish aoln 0. meet 5n•ukn 8. Betslldc, 12. Don 18. bong unlet 14. ('roeeut 10. Wild betray. 10. lite,, alto 18. Afrii•.to fly 20.Aaeutred by ) tbor t. Sett wartime 22. Algonquian Indian 21. Number 20, Stair 20. Blunder . Thong 03 f3. South A mer len n rives 84, Ory 84. wSear t0Sweet :ton Sea eeep 40. Sea eagle 41. Tea 44. tine 1e 0;,3433 14Hail 47, Without trees til. urem lu gne 50. 8a1411n 04, Likely Tleene 440 Small and wreak b4. Alkaline eolntinn Rtt rl Toned Down . I ( wit efts ilpikes n0 ntru mann tab u. Suldlle&,, 35. ;muss 4y Thin 10. Press 87. ltietakes 11. Re airs :00, niotant 17. Girl's. nett. (tretixr 13.'roners 27..wa8es 27. Not meat` 24. Unrefined m.-lt '5. alt, 87. 2hLd'c3na.l hI LW tel• 41, all 43.110n,l unto ni 47. A,exleiu, laborer 44. Princely faintly 45. hirer to 1 i 28 Slee ler {11111,4 12rttte,,:n,insnt . 8'. ,.. q•.e.e Fw i ,rter Aaswer elsew.bere on his page. A thermostat, with a bulb amounted flush with the top of the slab, controls the current to the sail -heating cable. A hover with an insulated top and cur- tain sides covers all but the out- side eight inches of the slab, and holds the heat down on the chicks. By leaving the eight - inch strip around the outside of the slab, moisture doesn't con- dense around the edge, says Funkhouser, and he ha" the out- side space for feeders and waterers. Other reasons why Funkhous- er likes the slab -brooding so well: et There's no tine hazard. ® Controls on the heat are automatic --less work. es The slab is easy to clean. ei Chicks drink up to three times as much water as they do under some other type brood- ers, because the slab keeps the water warns. • There's no wet, caked Potter around the brooder. t► There's little danger of power failure, and little danger of losing chicks, 0V011 though the power may go..of:f for a while. Funkhouser says: "One night last winter when our chicks were a week old the power was off .for eight hours, and the outside temperature got down to 20 deg. recs..But we didn't lose a chick, because the concrete stabs stay- ed warns enough to keep there • comfortable." This method of breeding isn't brand new; poultrymen in Geor- gia and some Eastern states like it, too. H W K Since the Arkansas Power and Light Company helped Funk- houser install ]tis brooders in April, 1952, five other Arkansas broiler men have followed suit. They're brooding chicks at ail average' cost, of .88 cents each, figured on this basis: 28,0(10 chicks brooded for an average Of 34 days, with an average elec- tricity cost of 2.3 ceuts per kwh. If you're interested in trying concrete slab brooding, your local Hydro should be able to help you set up the system. DAY SCOOL 1SON By Bey. 11, Barclay Warren, B.A., (Bee, 5lic,iatr Withstands F'atste Proltpet' 1 i lags 22:5-8, 13-18, 26.28. As the Lord lttteth, what the Lord saith sotto nee, that will I speak;. 1 Kings 22:1. Ahab, the wicked king of Is- rael, invited Jehosaphat, the king of Judah, to join him in an attempt to recover Ramoth from the King of Syria. Jehos- haphat agreed to go but asked that Ahab first inquire of the Lord. Four hundred prophets were gathered. They unani- mously approved the expedition, assuring that God -would grant success. But Jehosaphat wasn't satisfied. He was a good man, but was making a wrong move in entering into an unholy alli- ance with Ahab. This accounts for his uneasiness. He asked if there were not another prophet. Accordingly Micaiah was called and asked to join the others in speaking good to the king. Mi- caiah said he must give what God revealed to him. The king wanted an affirmative answer and Micaiah gave it. But the king easily detected the irony and asked for the truth. Then Micaiah told hila in the fent of a parable that he would be slain and his army scattered. This brought: reproof from the other prophets and • a sentence of prison with a bread and water diet from the king. But Micaiah did • not waver. The king be- lieved the majority and went to battle and was killed. A prophet or minister natural- ly prefers to give a pleasing message. The occasional inrli•• vidttal delights in irritating peo- ple but he is rare. It means much to declare God's message without fear or flavor. A miner - ter needs to beware lest he un- consciously compromise so as not to offend those whose so- cial prestige or wealth gives thein greater prominence in the church. We are a church -going people yet our record of • broken Montes and crime" in its many forms is baro. Is the ministry failing to lilt up God's standard for righteous -living? Are we failing to exalt Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour? Are we tell- ing the people plainly that God is displeased with their sins, but if they will repent and. believe 112 Jesus Christ they will be saved? If we faithfully present God's salvattioe to the people, the nation's morality should im- prove. '•earl any bony explain what in 111ea0t by foreign 31141lnele• menta?" "Yee, sir, spaghe SAW'S MUM. "Ile was 110 good at figures his boss advised him to give uy bookkeeping for art." More Mystery Races Cornirg To Light 1'h . ,tira;;iliatiou of tilt, clvliit- ed world was gripped recently by the amazing broadcast of Samuel Browne from Kuala Lumpur, when he reported than sudden appearance there of a mysterious rata of "Abutrtinable Fang Mon" They were seen on Christmas Day by Wong Yea -Moi, a Chi- nese girl, Her description was that three strange, fearsome creatures approached her. Their bodies were covered with hair. They wore loin cloths and car- ried long, curved knives. They also wore moustaches growing thigh length. All three had long fangs which protruded from their lower lips and down to- wards their chins, The sante day, Corporal Tahib saw them and his description was identical with that of the Chinese girl. Later, they were seen by a Malay girl, who ran away as fast as she could, Then an Indian rubber -tapper report- ed that the same three creatures crept up behind him , .. and he felt the hairy arms of the female around his body. He struggled free, then tainted. Anthropologists,, staggered by these reports, and anxious to in - v e s t i g a t e these Abominable Fang Men, have insisted that the creatures must tie no account be shot. It is amazing that in tills shrinking world of. ours there are still mystery races of whom scientists know nothing. Many Ogees in the past few years ex- plorers have caught glimpses of. tribes that were not known to exist. Den Haan, Dutch Government explorer, was hacking his way into unknown territory in New Guinea when he was suddenly surrounded by giant, naked sav- ages, well over six feet tall. They were armed with peculiar four -pronged spear s, and had never seen a white ratan. There was no official record of the existence of 1 h 1 s tribe yet, throughout the war, 'p lanes must have fought above them. An American soldier escaped from. the Japanese InBurma, and made his way through trackless forests to safety. He must have wandered through country completely unexplored, for he reported having seen, and even eaten with, a tribe of light- skinned natives none -of whom had any amts. He reported that there were no signs that their arms had been cut off. They ap- peared to have been born with- out them, doing everything with their toes. Australian pair ole in New Guinea during the war discov- ered iscovered a race of pigmies to the mountains 11 e a r Milne Bay. There had belai rtunours of such a tribe for many years but no one had ever seen them before. Average height lea; three feet, and their clothes were of tree bark. Dr, Pau/ Zalrl, a New° York scientist -explorer, journeyed into the unkuon n forests of Vene- zuela •t trw° years ago, He dis- covered a waterfall much higher than Niagara and. at the foot of it, a tribe of natives who had no word its their language for 'anger." Within living memory no member of the tribe had ever lost his, or her, temper or Amer any signs of jealousy. eg Ivan Sanderson informed .the Royal Geographical Society that the century -old legend of a tribe of. white Indians somewhere in America was correct. He had found one member of it, a young girl who had strayed away from the tribe and loot herself In that jungles- appearing suddenly In Paramaribo in n .tete of col: - tepee. Before she ailed she told hint that nova of her tribe even sus•= petted that other white people existed. Although a full-blooded. Indian she was us white as an English girl. One day, cants :intrepid ex- plorer may try to tallow up the Eskimo legends of the "Little Men" who are reputed to live• beyond the Arctic Circle. Stories of these dwarfs, who are sup- posed to be extremely strong, ara being told every day in Eskimo camps and tt•odioe eta tions. phistte14ei .est Thin Leave it to the do-it-yourself movement to develop an interest- ing new tread in decorating. It consists of. using wallpaper. ing techniques on uphoister3 tab ries to cover a wall. So, instead of painting or papering the wall;. you upholster it. Materials are usually vinyl plastics with strong cotton hacks. These are coated fabric's which were developed specifically for upholstering and chtplicate the look and feel of fine leathers, textured boucles, tweeds or mate- lasses. atelasses. 5111540 they are also as color -conscious es the new paints and drapery materialo. they are) adaptable to • 0lost decorating schemes. Small ares, which suddcniy a c 11 It nl a greater importauce through such wall treatments are fireplace chimneys, the walls of powder rooms and the warner - eating in halls and atom; stair- ways. When used Oft largo areas, coated fabric; can bring a new richness and softening warmth to the entire roans -•• whether - modern or traditional. Their resistance to r'.eil icing, marring and cracking make them one of the most practical wall coverings for basement play rooms and children's r000nn. All that is required in the way of maintenance is an occasional once-over with a damp, sudsy cloth, followed by a quick rub- down with a soft dry ane to i'e- stare the lustre. New recruits to the do••it-your self movement should acquire a little know-how before plunging in. Old wall surfaces should be cleaned free of dirt, grease, wall- paper or calcimine. To ensure good adhesion on gloss or semi- gloss, the extra smooth surface can be washed with a solution of washing soda -and then rinsed. For successful results, wall sur- faces should be pert-et'tly smooth. All imperfections should be eat out, filled with patching mater- lale, allowed to dry -and Bended with course paper. Then, dive the wall surface a coat of good quality glee•size and it is ready for hanging. (Upside down to prevent peekn gi 1 3N111I]A1 Q00 pop i- J. d V. 3 0 O x 3 1 3 3 11 1. Ego u 3 s a i fl' e -5-: DQ 5 a ;t;J3 Nmlf RANH ppug la t9 iRJu i El ,• P1ori1 o d • 4 f]fQ 114 -,z 03NMan 1212112 011151/5 11-6 ©S RUB v OEM i 130 dill ; C IID •, UN ftI1ILiI 111 ill1111111114 Aaswer elsew.bere on his page. A thermostat, with a bulb amounted flush with the top of the slab, controls the current to the sail -heating cable. A hover with an insulated top and cur- tain sides covers all but the out- side eight inches of the slab, and holds the heat down on the chicks. By leaving the eight - inch strip around the outside of the slab, moisture doesn't con- dense around the edge, says Funkhouser, and he ha" the out- side space for feeders and waterers. Other reasons why Funkhous- er likes the slab -brooding so well: et There's no tine hazard. ® Controls on the heat are automatic --less work. es The slab is easy to clean. ei Chicks drink up to three times as much water as they do under some other type brood- ers, because the slab keeps the water warns. • There's no wet, caked Potter around the brooder. t► There's little danger of power failure, and little danger of losing chicks, 0V011 though the power may go..of:f for a while. Funkhouser says: "One night last winter when our chicks were a week old the power was off .for eight hours, and the outside temperature got down to 20 deg. recs..But we didn't lose a chick, because the concrete stabs stay- ed warns enough to keep there • comfortable." This method of breeding isn't brand new; poultrymen in Geor- gia and some Eastern states like it, too. H W K Since the Arkansas Power and Light Company helped Funk- houser install ]tis brooders in April, 1952, five other Arkansas broiler men have followed suit. They're brooding chicks at ail average' cost, of .88 cents each, figured on this basis: 28,0(10 chicks brooded for an average Of 34 days, with an average elec- tricity cost of 2.3 ceuts per kwh. If you're interested in trying concrete slab brooding, your local Hydro should be able to help you set up the system. DAY SCOOL 1SON By Bey. 11, Barclay Warren, B.A., (Bee, 5lic,iatr Withstands F'atste Proltpet' 1 i lags 22:5-8, 13-18, 26.28. As the Lord lttteth, what the Lord saith sotto nee, that will I speak;. 1 Kings 22:1. Ahab, the wicked king of Is- rael, invited Jehosaphat, the king of Judah, to join him in an attempt to recover Ramoth from the King of Syria. Jehos- haphat agreed to go but asked that Ahab first inquire of the Lord. Four hundred prophets were gathered. They unani- mously approved the expedition, assuring that God -would grant success. But Jehosaphat wasn't satisfied. He was a good man, but was making a wrong move in entering into an unholy alli- ance with Ahab. This accounts for his uneasiness. He asked if there were not another prophet. Accordingly Micaiah was called and asked to join the others in speaking good to the king. Mi- caiah said he must give what God revealed to him. The king wanted an affirmative answer and Micaiah gave it. But the king easily detected the irony and asked for the truth. Then Micaiah told hila in the fent of a parable that he would be slain and his army scattered. This brought: reproof from the other prophets and • a sentence of prison with a bread and water diet from the king. But Micaiah did • not waver. The king be- lieved the majority and went to battle and was killed. A prophet or minister natural- ly prefers to give a pleasing message. The occasional inrli•• vidttal delights in irritating peo- ple but he is rare. It means much to declare God's message without fear or flavor. A miner - ter needs to beware lest he un- consciously compromise so as not to offend those whose so- cial prestige or wealth gives thein greater prominence in the church. We are a church -going people yet our record of • broken Montes and crime" in its many forms is baro. Is the ministry failing to lilt up God's standard for righteous -living? Are we failing to exalt Jesus Christ as Lord and Saviour? Are we tell- ing the people plainly that God is displeased with their sins, but if they will repent and. believe 112 Jesus Christ they will be saved? If we faithfully present God's salvattioe to the people, the nation's morality should im- prove. '•earl any bony explain what in 111ea0t by foreign 31141lnele• menta?" "Yee, sir, spaghe SAW'S MUM. "Ile was 110 good at figures his boss advised him to give uy bookkeeping for art." More Mystery Races Cornirg To Light 1'h . ,tira;;iliatiou of tilt, clvliit- ed world was gripped recently by the amazing broadcast of Samuel Browne from Kuala Lumpur, when he reported than sudden appearance there of a mysterious rata of "Abutrtinable Fang Mon" They were seen on Christmas Day by Wong Yea -Moi, a Chi- nese girl, Her description was that three strange, fearsome creatures approached her. Their bodies were covered with hair. They wore loin cloths and car- ried long, curved knives. They also wore moustaches growing thigh length. All three had long fangs which protruded from their lower lips and down to- wards their chins, The sante day, Corporal Tahib saw them and his description was identical with that of the Chinese girl. Later, they were seen by a Malay girl, who ran away as fast as she could, Then an Indian rubber -tapper report- ed that the same three creatures crept up behind him , .. and he felt the hairy arms of the female around his body. He struggled free, then tainted. Anthropologists,, staggered by these reports, and anxious to in - v e s t i g a t e these Abominable Fang Men, have insisted that the creatures must tie no account be shot. It is amazing that in tills shrinking world of. ours there are still mystery races of whom scientists know nothing. Many Ogees in the past few years ex- plorers have caught glimpses of. tribes that were not known to exist. Den Haan, Dutch Government explorer, was hacking his way into unknown territory in New Guinea when he was suddenly surrounded by giant, naked sav- ages, well over six feet tall. They were armed with peculiar four -pronged spear s, and had never seen a white ratan. There was no official record of the existence of 1 h 1 s tribe yet, throughout the war, 'p lanes must have fought above them. An American soldier escaped from. the Japanese InBurma, and made his way through trackless forests to safety. He must have wandered through country completely unexplored, for he reported having seen, and even eaten with, a tribe of light- skinned natives none -of whom had any amts. He reported that there were no signs that their arms had been cut off. They ap- peared to have been born with- out them, doing everything with their toes. Australian pair ole in New Guinea during the war discov- ered iscovered a race of pigmies to the mountains 11 e a r Milne Bay. There had belai rtunours of such a tribe for many years but no one had ever seen them before. Average height lea; three feet, and their clothes were of tree bark. Dr, Pau/ Zalrl, a New° York scientist -explorer, journeyed into the unkuon n forests of Vene- zuela •t trw° years ago, He dis- covered a waterfall much higher than Niagara and. at the foot of it, a tribe of natives who had no word its their language for 'anger." Within living memory no member of the tribe had ever lost his, or her, temper or Amer any signs of jealousy. eg Ivan Sanderson informed .the Royal Geographical Society that the century -old legend of a tribe of. white Indians somewhere in America was correct. He had found one member of it, a young girl who had strayed away from the tribe and loot herself In that jungles- appearing suddenly In Paramaribo in n .tete of col: - tepee. Before she ailed she told hint that nova of her tribe even sus•= petted that other white people existed. Although a full-blooded. Indian she was us white as an English girl. One day, cants :intrepid ex- plorer may try to tallow up the Eskimo legends of the "Little Men" who are reputed to live• beyond the Arctic Circle. Stories of these dwarfs, who are sup- posed to be extremely strong, ara being told every day in Eskimo camps and tt•odioe eta tions. phistte14ei .est Thin Leave it to the do-it-yourself movement to develop an interest- ing new tread in decorating. It consists of. using wallpaper. ing techniques on uphoister3 tab ries to cover a wall. So, instead of painting or papering the wall;. you upholster it. Materials are usually vinyl plastics with strong cotton hacks. These are coated fabric's which were developed specifically for upholstering and chtplicate the look and feel of fine leathers, textured boucles, tweeds or mate- lasses. atelasses. 5111540 they are also as color -conscious es the new paints and drapery materialo. they are) adaptable to • 0lost decorating schemes. Small ares, which suddcniy a c 11 It nl a greater importauce through such wall treatments are fireplace chimneys, the walls of powder rooms and the warner - eating in halls and atom; stair- ways. When used Oft largo areas, coated fabric; can bring a new richness and softening warmth to the entire roans -•• whether - modern or traditional. Their resistance to r'.eil icing, marring and cracking make them one of the most practical wall coverings for basement play rooms and children's r000nn. All that is required in the way of maintenance is an occasional once-over with a damp, sudsy cloth, followed by a quick rub- down with a soft dry ane to i'e- stare the lustre. New recruits to the do••it-your self movement should acquire a little know-how before plunging in. Old wall surfaces should be cleaned free of dirt, grease, wall- paper or calcimine. To ensure good adhesion on gloss or semi- gloss, the extra smooth surface can be washed with a solution of washing soda -and then rinsed. For successful results, wall sur- faces should be pert-et'tly smooth. All imperfections should be eat out, filled with patching mater- lale, allowed to dry -and Bended with course paper. Then, dive the wall surface a coat of good quality glee•size and it is ready for hanging. (Upside down to prevent peekn gi 1 3N111I]A1 Q00 pop i- J. d V. '+ANAlai h c 0 O x 3 1 3 3 11 1. Ego u V 3 s a 9 d d fl' e : D iQliellallell DQ 5 a ;t;J3 Nmlf ' Sts ppug la t9 iRJu i El ,• P1ori1 o d • 4 f]fQ 0Q);:. -,z 03NMan 1212112 011151/5 ©S RUB v OEM i 130 1111117 ; C IID •, UN v 1 Nnni.2 4'f.L'M405�3 Pickpocket - C. 8. Edntiusion arrives at the Son Diego Plaza with a good supply of corn and the pigeons ore there to greet him, They cluster on his arms, shoulder and hands and one bold fel- low gets right into the supply bin .his pocket.